#FlyWashington Magazine Winter 2018 | Page 33

New Orleans Street Musician Credit: WLDavies NEW ORLEANS: THERE’S SOMETHING FOR EVERYONE IN THE CRESCENT CITY BY JENNY PETERS New Orleans celebrates 300 years of existence in 2018; it’s one of America’s oldest cities, steeped in history and inhabitants that have always had a legendary true zest for living. Everyone knows there’s “music in the streets both night and day” (as Paul Simon so famously sings in “Take Me to the Mardi Gras.”), but music is just one part of the puzzle that makes NOLA such a special place to explore. NOLA is for . . . HISTORY LOVERS THE NATIONAL WORLD WAR II MUSEUM The National World War II Museum is an incredible museum, filled with everything you could possibly want to know about America’s experience in the devastating war that engulfed the world in the 1930s and 40s. With fascinating interactive exhibits, actual planes, tanks and other war materials and much more on its six-acre campus, this is not to be missed. Be sure to visit the Higgins Boats — small troop landing boats invented here by Andrew Higgins that changed the course of the war for the Allies in both the Pacific and European fronts. ABOVEGROUND CEMETERY TOURS New Orleans is an awfully wet place, sitting as it does on the banks of the mighty Mississippi, which is why the city’s cemeteries all consist of aboveground tombs dating back hundreds of years. Guided tours abound, weaving in tales of ghosts and voodoo; pick one that includes the famed St. Louis Cemetery #1 in the Tremé neighborhood (you must have a guide to enter this resting place) and Lafayette Cemetery #1 in the Garden District to visit some of the oldest graves in the city. PLANTATION VISITS Southern history is on display at numerous plantations near NOLA. Take an afternoon to see Destrehan plantation dating back to 1790 and located just west of the airport. Or go a bit further to see the Whitney Plantation (circa 1752), whose story focuses on the experiences of the slaves imprisoned here. Go east of NOLA along the river to see the Chalmette Battlefield, where the 1815 Battle of New Orleans was fought, and where the Malus Beauregard Plantation House still stands. FAMILY ADVENTURERS THE AUDUBON NATURE INSTITUTE Families visiting NOLA will marvel at all the things to do within the Audubon Nature Institute. It’s a nonprofit organization that manages 10 museums and parks dedicated to nature, which means fun kids’ CONTINUED ON NEXT PAGE WINTER 2018/19 31 FLYWASHINGTON.COM